When I sit here and think about all of the music I’ve somehow never exposed myself to, Blameshift is one of those bands. I can’t even imagine why this band has not been a part of my own, personal playlist. I’m a huge fan of female-fronted rock bands and the vocals on Jenny are absolutely out of this world-strong. Lyrics aside, her sound alone gives meaning to each song. Blameshift has been around since 2005 and have released many great songs from their multiple Cd’s and EP’s. This most recently includes their new video for the song “Monster”, one of the 5 songs off of their 2016 EP release “Heart of Stone”. It fully engulfs the magnitude of the passion and sound this band works so hard to achieve.
Blameshift got its’ start in 2005 and consists of vocalist, Jenny Mann, guitarist, Tim Barbour, Mike LaRoach on bass, and Jeff Maurer on drums. Though there have been some changes to their original lineup throughout the years, Jenny and Tim remained constant in their endeavor to create and produce a band worthy of success. They are proof that persistence and a deep desire to create great music pays off.
Interview with Jenny Mann – Vocalist/Blameshift
By: Leslie Elder Rogers
Metal Exiles: What or who was it that sparked your interest and desire to become a singer/songwriter/musician?
Jenny: Well, I rarely talk about this, but it is my history, but I grew up doing theater my whole life. I was always on stage from a young age, performing and singing and acting, so I had the bug. That was it for me but I would say when I first heard Alanis Morissette…that album, Jagged Little Pill, that was, for me, the turning point where I realized, ok, I’m not gonna be on Broadway. That’s just not gonna happen, but I wanna be a rock star and I wanna be powerful. I want to be able to tell my story and share my life and my emotions with people and have them connect with it. So for me, she was, to me, that person. I think that she was fearless and just didn’t care what people thought of her and that, to me, is awesome. In that time period, Green Day, Smashing Pumpkins and Nirvana, and all that, that was my beginning of my rock obsession.
Metal Exiles: As a band, you’ve been creating music for about 12 years now. What have been your biggest struggles/hurdles to overcome?
Jenny: There have been a lot and in our bio you can, well, bands write their bios or labels write their bios and it’s just like, oh whatever, let’s just throw some stuff together, but for me, I wanted to briefly tell what we’ve been through because it’s been a lot. It has been a roller coaster for us a band. I know that most bands go through that but when we started out as a band, our initial goal was that we were gonna tour. We didn’t have a booking agent. We didn’t have a label. We had no money. We sold our gear. We sold the stuff in our apartments. We took out loans. We did whatever we had to do to be able to get on the road and we spent much of our time as a band on the road…365 days a year for years and years. I guess the biggest hurdle with deciding to be a “road band” rather than a “hometown hero” band is members…getting the right people that wanted to do what we were doing. It’s not for everyone. I mean, everyone thinks they want to tour. That’s the dream; be in a band and go on tour but actually going on tour and doing it, blood sweat and tears, that’s a whole other story. For us, the hardest thing was just having the right team. It’s always been me and Tim from day one and everybody knows Blameshift is Jenny and Tim, so. It’s crazy but for the bands that make it as long as we have, they just happen and that’s just the way it is.
Metal Exiles: You have said recently that with your new rhythm section, you have now found the missing piece of your puzzle and you’ve just kind of elaborated on that a little with stating that having the right team is what it’s about.
Metal Exiles: Throughout your career so far, you’ve toured a lot, like six years straight. That’s a lot of on road time, a lot of blood sweat and tears as you put it. Throughout your career so far you’ve toured with some amazing artists and bands. Is there any particular advice or experience that someone has gone over with you that changed your vision or helped you along the way?
Jenny: Actually yes. That is an easy question for me to answer because in 2012, we did a tour and it was probably the best tour we’ve been on so as far as just being what tours are supposed to be about. It was a tour we did with a band called 12 Stones. They’ve had an amazing career. It was also with a band called Digital Summer and a band called Throwing Gravity. It was a four band package and we were out for two months together, travelling all over and getting to know each other. I really became close with Paul McCoy who is the singer of 12 Stones. Everybody knows him from the Evanescence song. He has his moment with that and he’s just really been in this business and learned so much. Not only did he take me under his wing, he actually performed on one of our songs on the following album after I met him. He gave me so much advice; advice that he didn’t even realize that he was giving me just in the way he performs; how people feel when they watch him on stage. I just learned so much from him. He’s honest and he’s not scared to be vulnerable and to cry on stage if he has to, if he feels it. Every night I watched him and I learned. He taught me so much about being a musician and about being honest so he is definitely my guy, my mentor, and we’re still very good friends to this day.
Metal Exiles: The song “Monster” has a pretty powerful meaning. It can be perceived to be about many things but the video has it representing the impact that the all-mighty dollar has on people and how it has the power to turn us all into monsters. Did you write that song personally? Is that the direction you intended for the song when it was written? If not, what was your inspiration for the song and whose vision created the change per the video?
Jenny: Yes I did write it and when it was written, we didn’t have any idea that we would do a video like that. We had the idea of following the storyline of a dollar bill as it makes its way through different scenes and kind of tracking that. We had that idea for a while. When I wrote Monster, to me, it’s a self-reflective song. It’s not a depressing song. It’s a song about the truth. Everyone has their little things that they can’t control. Things that are inside of them that they’re trying to overcome; things that they’re trying to be better than. It was definitely a reflective song at the time that I wrote it and it’s about improving. It’s not meant to be taken negatively. Everyone has that side to them but it’s about getting through it and living day to day with that.
Metal Exiles: Describe your experience with Eric Schneider as he directed the video, pros and cons? Was it smooth sailing all the way through or were there artistic or creative differences along the way that slowed or sped up the process?
Jenny: We actually met Eric through our drummer. He had known him from a previous band or previous project he was in. Eric has done some really awesome work. He was nominated for a Grammy for a video that he did for Miguel who is an R&B artist. He’d done a lot of really, really, great work but he’d never done a rock band. Actually our first video for Ghost, we did that video with an up and coming videographer who had never done a rock band either and he went on to be one of the biggest guys right now. He’s doing videos for literally everyone. He’s so huge that we can’t even get him on the phone. That’s what happened to that guy so we like that; let’s take a risk and see. People that are talented with one genre’ can always cross over so for us it was really cool to see what he could do and for him it was his very first rock band. He’s full of knowledge. He’s so creative. He and his crew were so professional. The little girl in the video is actually his daughter. She’s a professional actress. She’s been on the Disney Channel. She’s amazing as well. It was a very easy experience. He sent us back the first cut and we were very happy with his choices. We just kind of clicked so we were very lucky because we’ve had experiences in the past with music videos where we did not click and it did not go smoothly. This was pretty amazing.
Metal Exiles: With Erik Ron producing for the band now, how does his style and effort differ from that of your prior producer, Mike Watts?
Jenny: Well we’ve been very lucky in our career to have met a lot of people as they were coming up and Erik is one of them. When we first met him, he had just gotten his own studio. He had been working for a much bigger producer as his assistant. I can’t think of his name at the moment but he was one of the biggest rock producers. Erik had been his assistant for years and he had just branched off to start his own thing. We were one of the first bands that worked with him. Since then, again, he is one of the biggest rock producers around; producing every big album that’s coming out. We kind of got grandfathered in and he took us under his wing as well and we are best friends with him. We’ve been so lucky because his career has completely skyrocketed. His approach is very different from any of the other producers we’ve worked with prior. He said “when I’m done with you, it’s gonna be a new Blameshift” and it was. He just takes a lot of time. He co-writes. He helps. If we play an idea to him and he doesn’t think its good enough, he tells us he doesn’t think its good enough. He’ll tell us “I like this part but let’s take this part out”. He’s honest but not to the point that you feel beaten down. You’re actually empowered by his honesty and the way that he presents things. He really is just the cream of the crop of producers in this genre’. He’s really helped us out and we continue to write good music together.
Metal Exiles: What is your favorite song from the current EP and why?
Jenny: I guess I’m gonna say “Tell Me It’s Alright” which is the first song that we released. I really have a connection to the song. The whole EP, I mean, I wrote all the words, and everything is about something that I’m currently going through or have already gone through and that to me just sums up our band. If someone were to ask what Blameshift is all about, I would tell them it’s that song. That’s what we are about.
Metal Exiles: Considering all of your music to date, what song is the most meaningful to you…or one that you will always perform, without fail, at each and every concert?
Jenny: That’s a good question but it’s kind of a weird answer. My favorite song that I’ve ever written, I’ve never performed it live, ever. It’s definitely by far my favorite song and it probably always be. It’s one of the only ballads that we’ve ever written. I mean, I’ve written ballads but it never really made it to a record. This one is called “Wherever It Goes”. It’s on our Secrets album. It’s the last track on that album and it’s a ballad. The story takes place with my life at that point in time. I was moving out of the house that I grew up in. My mom had just married for the second time. I’m on the road. I have my home base which is my house, thank God for that. At the time we were out on the road all the time. Now she’s moving on. My sister has moved out and it’s time to move on with my life and see where it’s taking me. You have to listen to it. I’ll always go back to that time and how scared I was to be an adult and start my life. It’s my favorite song but it’s the kind of song that people at a rock concert have to be in the right frame of mind to grasp so we’ve never played it live, ever, but it is, by far, my favorite song.
Metal Exiles: In terms of gear, what are some of the bands’ favorite pieces to use live versus studio?
Jenny: The instruments that we play and the companies that we support cross over from the stage to the studio. For me, I’ve been endorsed by Sennheiser for years. We use their mics; their wireless mics and they’re a really great company that supports their artists. Tim, PRS guitars show him so much love and send him so many guitars and let him just be an artist. We use Bogner Amps. We pretty much have, as a band, we went after our endorsements early on because we support them. We tour. We play the same gear every night. People see it and they support us in return. It’s a really great partnership when you can find those companies. We also use Ampeg and GHS Strings. They’re unbelievable. We go to their factory in Battle Creek, Michigan every time we’re in town. We get to see how the strings are made and it’s an amazing process. Those are some of the key ones.
Metal Exiles: You’ll be announcing your upcoming spring 2017 US tour dates soon. Do you plan to focus on certain demographic areas of the US or will it encompass the entire US?
Jenny: Our last tour took us out west. We did Utah and Colorado. We went pretty far out west so I would imagine, even though the dates aren’t set yet, for the most part, we tend to stay around the mid-west, west of Texas. That’s our usual loop. We go as far as North Dakota and then straight down to Texas and loop around. It’s a real undertaking to go straight to California and do the whole west. Trust me, we’ve done it a million times but we’ve been focusing more on the mid-west and the south as of lately.
Metal Exiles: Aside from the upcoming tour announcement, what should fans expect to see next from Blameshift?
Jenny: We’re working on some new songs. There’s a possibility that we’ll do another music video because they’re so much fun to do. The exposure you get from a music video is beyond, I mean, you can’t get any better exposure just putting out an album. Once you see the story to a song, it just makes it that much better. So there’s a chance we’ll do another music video but we’re definitely writing new songs and a lot of our fans already know, Tim and I started a jewelry line that’s been taking off. We got started from our fans and they’ve been supporting us with that so expect a lot coming up soon. We’re in over 30 stores now across the US. Things are going good.
Metal Exiles: You’ve created a lot of videos already, so has there been one that’s been the most fun to create or is there a favorite of yours or a band favorite so far?
Jenny: A favorite of mine or a favorite of someone else’s?
Metal Exiles: A favorite of yours, and why not, tell me a favorite of someone else’s music that you love.
Jenny: A favorite of mine, ok. Secrets. It was our last video and we got to shoot it in an actual haunted house. It’s a real house that was on ghost hunters. It’s an abandoned house in Louisville, Kentucky. It was an amazing experience. We were on set for about five days. The newspaper came out. The mayor came out to welcome us to town. It was a tiny little town. That was a great experience and of course the video; I love the video. I love the story. There was a lot of love put into that. I’m trying to think of a music video that I love. Man, I don’t even know. I don’t see music videos myself that much anymore. Back in the day, MTV was huge. You know what video was always awesome to me? “Black Hole Sun”. Do you remember that video?
Metal Exiles: I do. My son and I were actually just talking about them yesterday because they’ll be at Welcome to Rockville.
Jenny: Man that was a crazy video. That was like a first of its’ kind with the different effects that they used and stuff. I think I had nightmares for years about that video but it sticks out.
Metal Exiles: As far as touring, is there a specific band or bands that you would like to see yourself on tour with?
Jenny: Well, all of the bands I’ve toured with, I loved touring with and would tour with any of them again any day, but one band that I’ve always wanted to go out on the road with because they seem like they’d be so much fun…and I’ve heard that from all of the bands that have been out with them in the past, is Papa Roach. I love that band. I’ve me Jacoby back stage at a show that they played about a year ago and we hit it off. It was just a lot of fun. That’s definitely on my bucket list. I hope that happens sometime soon.
Blameshift - Monster (Official Music Video): https://www.vevo.com/watch/blameshift/Monster/QMGR31599268
DOWNLOAD THEIR NEW EP "HEART OF STONE" NOW AVAIL ON ITUNES! https://goo.gl/DyU5jr
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/blameshift/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/blameshift
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/blameshift
Blameshift got its’ start in 2005 and consists of vocalist, Jenny Mann, guitarist, Tim Barbour, Mike LaRoach on bass, and Jeff Maurer on drums. Though there have been some changes to their original lineup throughout the years, Jenny and Tim remained constant in their endeavor to create and produce a band worthy of success. They are proof that persistence and a deep desire to create great music pays off.
Interview with Jenny Mann – Vocalist/Blameshift
By: Leslie Elder Rogers
Metal Exiles: What or who was it that sparked your interest and desire to become a singer/songwriter/musician?
Jenny: Well, I rarely talk about this, but it is my history, but I grew up doing theater my whole life. I was always on stage from a young age, performing and singing and acting, so I had the bug. That was it for me but I would say when I first heard Alanis Morissette…that album, Jagged Little Pill, that was, for me, the turning point where I realized, ok, I’m not gonna be on Broadway. That’s just not gonna happen, but I wanna be a rock star and I wanna be powerful. I want to be able to tell my story and share my life and my emotions with people and have them connect with it. So for me, she was, to me, that person. I think that she was fearless and just didn’t care what people thought of her and that, to me, is awesome. In that time period, Green Day, Smashing Pumpkins and Nirvana, and all that, that was my beginning of my rock obsession.
Metal Exiles: As a band, you’ve been creating music for about 12 years now. What have been your biggest struggles/hurdles to overcome?
Jenny: There have been a lot and in our bio you can, well, bands write their bios or labels write their bios and it’s just like, oh whatever, let’s just throw some stuff together, but for me, I wanted to briefly tell what we’ve been through because it’s been a lot. It has been a roller coaster for us a band. I know that most bands go through that but when we started out as a band, our initial goal was that we were gonna tour. We didn’t have a booking agent. We didn’t have a label. We had no money. We sold our gear. We sold the stuff in our apartments. We took out loans. We did whatever we had to do to be able to get on the road and we spent much of our time as a band on the road…365 days a year for years and years. I guess the biggest hurdle with deciding to be a “road band” rather than a “hometown hero” band is members…getting the right people that wanted to do what we were doing. It’s not for everyone. I mean, everyone thinks they want to tour. That’s the dream; be in a band and go on tour but actually going on tour and doing it, blood sweat and tears, that’s a whole other story. For us, the hardest thing was just having the right team. It’s always been me and Tim from day one and everybody knows Blameshift is Jenny and Tim, so. It’s crazy but for the bands that make it as long as we have, they just happen and that’s just the way it is.
Metal Exiles: You have said recently that with your new rhythm section, you have now found the missing piece of your puzzle and you’ve just kind of elaborated on that a little with stating that having the right team is what it’s about.
Metal Exiles: Throughout your career so far, you’ve toured a lot, like six years straight. That’s a lot of on road time, a lot of blood sweat and tears as you put it. Throughout your career so far you’ve toured with some amazing artists and bands. Is there any particular advice or experience that someone has gone over with you that changed your vision or helped you along the way?
Jenny: Actually yes. That is an easy question for me to answer because in 2012, we did a tour and it was probably the best tour we’ve been on so as far as just being what tours are supposed to be about. It was a tour we did with a band called 12 Stones. They’ve had an amazing career. It was also with a band called Digital Summer and a band called Throwing Gravity. It was a four band package and we were out for two months together, travelling all over and getting to know each other. I really became close with Paul McCoy who is the singer of 12 Stones. Everybody knows him from the Evanescence song. He has his moment with that and he’s just really been in this business and learned so much. Not only did he take me under his wing, he actually performed on one of our songs on the following album after I met him. He gave me so much advice; advice that he didn’t even realize that he was giving me just in the way he performs; how people feel when they watch him on stage. I just learned so much from him. He’s honest and he’s not scared to be vulnerable and to cry on stage if he has to, if he feels it. Every night I watched him and I learned. He taught me so much about being a musician and about being honest so he is definitely my guy, my mentor, and we’re still very good friends to this day.
Metal Exiles: The song “Monster” has a pretty powerful meaning. It can be perceived to be about many things but the video has it representing the impact that the all-mighty dollar has on people and how it has the power to turn us all into monsters. Did you write that song personally? Is that the direction you intended for the song when it was written? If not, what was your inspiration for the song and whose vision created the change per the video?
Jenny: Yes I did write it and when it was written, we didn’t have any idea that we would do a video like that. We had the idea of following the storyline of a dollar bill as it makes its way through different scenes and kind of tracking that. We had that idea for a while. When I wrote Monster, to me, it’s a self-reflective song. It’s not a depressing song. It’s a song about the truth. Everyone has their little things that they can’t control. Things that are inside of them that they’re trying to overcome; things that they’re trying to be better than. It was definitely a reflective song at the time that I wrote it and it’s about improving. It’s not meant to be taken negatively. Everyone has that side to them but it’s about getting through it and living day to day with that.
Metal Exiles: Describe your experience with Eric Schneider as he directed the video, pros and cons? Was it smooth sailing all the way through or were there artistic or creative differences along the way that slowed or sped up the process?
Jenny: We actually met Eric through our drummer. He had known him from a previous band or previous project he was in. Eric has done some really awesome work. He was nominated for a Grammy for a video that he did for Miguel who is an R&B artist. He’d done a lot of really, really, great work but he’d never done a rock band. Actually our first video for Ghost, we did that video with an up and coming videographer who had never done a rock band either and he went on to be one of the biggest guys right now. He’s doing videos for literally everyone. He’s so huge that we can’t even get him on the phone. That’s what happened to that guy so we like that; let’s take a risk and see. People that are talented with one genre’ can always cross over so for us it was really cool to see what he could do and for him it was his very first rock band. He’s full of knowledge. He’s so creative. He and his crew were so professional. The little girl in the video is actually his daughter. She’s a professional actress. She’s been on the Disney Channel. She’s amazing as well. It was a very easy experience. He sent us back the first cut and we were very happy with his choices. We just kind of clicked so we were very lucky because we’ve had experiences in the past with music videos where we did not click and it did not go smoothly. This was pretty amazing.
Metal Exiles: With Erik Ron producing for the band now, how does his style and effort differ from that of your prior producer, Mike Watts?
Jenny: Well we’ve been very lucky in our career to have met a lot of people as they were coming up and Erik is one of them. When we first met him, he had just gotten his own studio. He had been working for a much bigger producer as his assistant. I can’t think of his name at the moment but he was one of the biggest rock producers. Erik had been his assistant for years and he had just branched off to start his own thing. We were one of the first bands that worked with him. Since then, again, he is one of the biggest rock producers around; producing every big album that’s coming out. We kind of got grandfathered in and he took us under his wing as well and we are best friends with him. We’ve been so lucky because his career has completely skyrocketed. His approach is very different from any of the other producers we’ve worked with prior. He said “when I’m done with you, it’s gonna be a new Blameshift” and it was. He just takes a lot of time. He co-writes. He helps. If we play an idea to him and he doesn’t think its good enough, he tells us he doesn’t think its good enough. He’ll tell us “I like this part but let’s take this part out”. He’s honest but not to the point that you feel beaten down. You’re actually empowered by his honesty and the way that he presents things. He really is just the cream of the crop of producers in this genre’. He’s really helped us out and we continue to write good music together.
Metal Exiles: What is your favorite song from the current EP and why?
Jenny: I guess I’m gonna say “Tell Me It’s Alright” which is the first song that we released. I really have a connection to the song. The whole EP, I mean, I wrote all the words, and everything is about something that I’m currently going through or have already gone through and that to me just sums up our band. If someone were to ask what Blameshift is all about, I would tell them it’s that song. That’s what we are about.
Metal Exiles: Considering all of your music to date, what song is the most meaningful to you…or one that you will always perform, without fail, at each and every concert?
Jenny: That’s a good question but it’s kind of a weird answer. My favorite song that I’ve ever written, I’ve never performed it live, ever. It’s definitely by far my favorite song and it probably always be. It’s one of the only ballads that we’ve ever written. I mean, I’ve written ballads but it never really made it to a record. This one is called “Wherever It Goes”. It’s on our Secrets album. It’s the last track on that album and it’s a ballad. The story takes place with my life at that point in time. I was moving out of the house that I grew up in. My mom had just married for the second time. I’m on the road. I have my home base which is my house, thank God for that. At the time we were out on the road all the time. Now she’s moving on. My sister has moved out and it’s time to move on with my life and see where it’s taking me. You have to listen to it. I’ll always go back to that time and how scared I was to be an adult and start my life. It’s my favorite song but it’s the kind of song that people at a rock concert have to be in the right frame of mind to grasp so we’ve never played it live, ever, but it is, by far, my favorite song.
Metal Exiles: In terms of gear, what are some of the bands’ favorite pieces to use live versus studio?
Jenny: The instruments that we play and the companies that we support cross over from the stage to the studio. For me, I’ve been endorsed by Sennheiser for years. We use their mics; their wireless mics and they’re a really great company that supports their artists. Tim, PRS guitars show him so much love and send him so many guitars and let him just be an artist. We use Bogner Amps. We pretty much have, as a band, we went after our endorsements early on because we support them. We tour. We play the same gear every night. People see it and they support us in return. It’s a really great partnership when you can find those companies. We also use Ampeg and GHS Strings. They’re unbelievable. We go to their factory in Battle Creek, Michigan every time we’re in town. We get to see how the strings are made and it’s an amazing process. Those are some of the key ones.
Metal Exiles: You’ll be announcing your upcoming spring 2017 US tour dates soon. Do you plan to focus on certain demographic areas of the US or will it encompass the entire US?
Jenny: Our last tour took us out west. We did Utah and Colorado. We went pretty far out west so I would imagine, even though the dates aren’t set yet, for the most part, we tend to stay around the mid-west, west of Texas. That’s our usual loop. We go as far as North Dakota and then straight down to Texas and loop around. It’s a real undertaking to go straight to California and do the whole west. Trust me, we’ve done it a million times but we’ve been focusing more on the mid-west and the south as of lately.
Metal Exiles: Aside from the upcoming tour announcement, what should fans expect to see next from Blameshift?
Jenny: We’re working on some new songs. There’s a possibility that we’ll do another music video because they’re so much fun to do. The exposure you get from a music video is beyond, I mean, you can’t get any better exposure just putting out an album. Once you see the story to a song, it just makes it that much better. So there’s a chance we’ll do another music video but we’re definitely writing new songs and a lot of our fans already know, Tim and I started a jewelry line that’s been taking off. We got started from our fans and they’ve been supporting us with that so expect a lot coming up soon. We’re in over 30 stores now across the US. Things are going good.
Metal Exiles: You’ve created a lot of videos already, so has there been one that’s been the most fun to create or is there a favorite of yours or a band favorite so far?
Jenny: A favorite of mine or a favorite of someone else’s?
Metal Exiles: A favorite of yours, and why not, tell me a favorite of someone else’s music that you love.
Jenny: A favorite of mine, ok. Secrets. It was our last video and we got to shoot it in an actual haunted house. It’s a real house that was on ghost hunters. It’s an abandoned house in Louisville, Kentucky. It was an amazing experience. We were on set for about five days. The newspaper came out. The mayor came out to welcome us to town. It was a tiny little town. That was a great experience and of course the video; I love the video. I love the story. There was a lot of love put into that. I’m trying to think of a music video that I love. Man, I don’t even know. I don’t see music videos myself that much anymore. Back in the day, MTV was huge. You know what video was always awesome to me? “Black Hole Sun”. Do you remember that video?
Metal Exiles: I do. My son and I were actually just talking about them yesterday because they’ll be at Welcome to Rockville.
Jenny: Man that was a crazy video. That was like a first of its’ kind with the different effects that they used and stuff. I think I had nightmares for years about that video but it sticks out.
Metal Exiles: As far as touring, is there a specific band or bands that you would like to see yourself on tour with?
Jenny: Well, all of the bands I’ve toured with, I loved touring with and would tour with any of them again any day, but one band that I’ve always wanted to go out on the road with because they seem like they’d be so much fun…and I’ve heard that from all of the bands that have been out with them in the past, is Papa Roach. I love that band. I’ve me Jacoby back stage at a show that they played about a year ago and we hit it off. It was just a lot of fun. That’s definitely on my bucket list. I hope that happens sometime soon.
Blameshift - Monster (Official Music Video): https://www.vevo.com/watch/blameshift/Monster/QMGR31599268
DOWNLOAD THEIR NEW EP "HEART OF STONE" NOW AVAIL ON ITUNES! https://goo.gl/DyU5jr
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/blameshift/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/blameshift
Reverbnation: https://www.reverbnation.com/blameshift